There doesn’t seem to be a very active filmmaking community on Lemmy, so I thought I’d ask here.

I’ve been using Artlist.io for almost a year now but I’ve started being less and less impressed with the music. A lot of it feels the same or leans too much into the corporate genre.

I’m looking for recommendations before I renew my subscription. Audiio seems like it could be a good deal? Musicbed also seems great but a little more expensive than I’d like at the moment.

Any other recommendations that I should look at?

  • @[email protected]
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    103 months ago

    Scour the depths of band camp. There are plenty of excellent, unpublished, unsigned bands that may have the exact vibe you’re looking for that would love to accept a modest fee for their music rights.

    • @[email protected]
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      3 months ago

      Many of us on bandcamp use the CC license. It’s free, just credit us somewhere. At least I do. My stuff is pay what you want. $0 is an option. Yay you own it now. It does have a license. If you use it commercially, you must credit my artist name.

  • @Ziggurat
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    43 months ago

    For the 2 short films I ever edited, I used YouTube audio library.

    May be a free/ creative commons musical platform like Jamendo is stll around. Haven’t checked for a while

    • thisisbutaname
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      33 months ago

      Jamendo is definitely still around, and there has always been plenty of music made as a score there

  • @[email protected]
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    33 months ago

    I kind of like Premiumbeat.com because you can just buy tracks and don’t have to subscribe, though they also lean pretty heavily in to corporate too but then they have so much stuff that you still have good odds of finding something that will work. Audio Network is very good and I think have some of the best tools for narrowing search results that I’ve used, that said though, like all libraries it’s incredibly frustrating because just nothing really fits and you can waste hours even days and might still find nothing. AudioNetwork often seems to lean in to bigger, cinematic sounds and it’s hard to get subtle stuff, they are good to work with on really big projects because they have people who can help you find stuff.

  • Footnote2669
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    23 months ago

    I’m sure you can find something on YouTube, plenty are copyright royalty free